| > Please show documentation where Apple refused to license under W3C patent policy. Sure. From the TE-PAG report, Apple expressly excluded its Touch Events patent claims from the W3C patent policy: Patent Advisory Groups are formed when patent claims are asserted
against or expressly excluded from royalty-free implementations of W3C
Recommendations. That happened here when Apple excluded certain of its
patents and patent applications for the Touch Events Specification.
Source: http://www.w3.org/2012/te-pag/pagreport.html> W3C then abandoned the recommendation process at that time without pursuing patent licensing discussions of any kind with Apple. Not true. After five months of work, the PAG officially recommended in July 2012 that the Working Group continue developing the Touch Events spec, which it did for over a year before publishing Touch Events as a W3C Recommendation in October 2013: http://w3.org/TR/touch-events/ The PAG repeatedly invited Apple to meetings and requested other information from them; Apple never replied to any of our communications. This is recorded in the document above, as well as the PAG meeting minutes. Disclosure: I am co-editor of the W3C Touch Events spec, and a member of the Touch Events Patent Advisory Group. |